Shirk v. City of Chicago

195 Ill. 298 | Ill. | 1902

Mr. Justice Magruder

delivered the opinion of the court:

Michigan avenue in the city of Chicago, as originally laid out between lot 1 in block 23 of the canal commissioners’ subdivision of fractional section 15, town 39, range 14, on the east, and lots 9,12 and 13 of block 21 on the west was one hundred and twenty feet wide, as shown by said plat and the plat subsequently made of Johnston •& Laflin’s subdivision. In other words, Michigan avenue between Park row on the north and Twelfth street on the south, was originally laid out as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide. Appellant claims to be the owner of the east thirty feet of Michigan avenue as thus originally laid out, that is to say, of a strip of land thirty feet in width from east to west, which lies next west of and adjoining lots 10, 11 and 12 in Johnston & Laflin’s subdivision, said strip thirty feet wide running from Park row on the north to Twelfth street on the south. On the other hand, the city of Chicago claims that said strip, thirty feet wide, is still a part of Michigan avenue, and is owned by the city subject to such control over the same, or such interest in the same, as may have been heretofore granted by the city to the South Park Commissioners. The question, therefore, to be decided, is whether the strip in question belongs to appellant, or to the city of Chicago.

Appellant does not claim to have any paramount or government title to the strip in question. Whatever interest he has in the strip he bases upon adverse possession in his grantors and himself for a long period of years, and upon an alleged estoppel and abandonment on the part of the city.

The record shows, that Charles G. Wicker was the •owner of lots 9 and 10 in Johnston & Laflin’s subdivision from August 1, 1857, to February 13, 1875, a period of about eighteen years. In 1858 or 1859 Wicker built a brick house upon lot 10, fronting north on Park row and running back on the east line of Michigan avenue. The west side of this house was built on a line with the west side of lot 10, which was the east side of the thirty-foot strip in question. After the house was constructed, it .appears that the eaves thereof projected a short distance over upon the strip in question, and that a bay window in the second story of the house, and some eight or ten feet above the ground, projected a short distance over the strip. It also appears that, about the time when Wicker finished his house, or shortly thereafter, he fenced in that portion of the strip lying on the west side of his house as a grass plot. The fence, enclosing the grass plot, was originally a wooden fence, and many years after-wards an iron fence upon a stone coping was substituted for the wooden fence. The house built by Wicker is still standing. The fence remained around the grass plot until 1892, when, about the time of the execution of the quit-claim deed executed by the appellant to Holmes and Rigdon conveying the strip, the city of Chicago, through its officers and employes, tore the'fence down. After the foreclosure of the trust deed executed by Holmes & Rig-don to Ullmann for use of the appellant, the fence was re-built by the appellant. The projection of the eaves and of the bay window of the house, built by Wicker, still exists as when the house was originally constructed. The only possession, relied upon by the appellant as to that part of the strip lying west of .lot 10, is the enclosure of the same by the fence originally built by Wicker, and the projection of the eaves and bay window over the same.

In 1852 Joseph Johnston built a house on what was subsequently lot 12, at the south-west corner of the original lot 1 of block 23, being the north-east corner of Michigan avenue and Twelfth street. Johnston, after he built bis house, enclosed that part of the strip in front of him and made a grass plot of it. The porch and steps of his house projected over and into the thirty-foot strip, the western side of his house being on a line with the eastern edge of the strip, and the eastern edge of Michigan avenue. In 1869 Mrs. Eliza A. J. Temple, being the owner of lot 11, built a house thereon fronting upon the strip, whose steps and eaves projected over and into the strip. The portion of the strip in front of her house was also enclosed by a fence and made into a grass plot. Mrs. Temple’s house was also built upon the east line of the strip in question, or of Michigan avenue as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide. The enclosure of the strip in front of lots 11 and 12, and the projection of the porch and of the steps of the houses built upon lots 11 and 12, are the acts of possession relied upon by the appellant, so far as that portion of the strip which lies west of lots 11 and 12 is concerned. Great stress is laid by appellant’s counsel upon the long period of time, during which these enclosures and projections existed, such period of time having been somewhere in the neighborhood of thirty-five or forty years.

Leaving, for the present, the question of appellant’s alleged title to, or interest in, the strip, we will consider appellant’s contention in reference to the title to, or interest therein, of the city of Chicago. It is not denied on the part of the appellant, that Michigan avenue between Park row and Twelfth street was originally laid out as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide. It is claimed, however, that, although such width was designated upon the plat made by the canal commissioners on June 13, 1836, yet the dedication of the street as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide, made by the acknowledging and recording of that plat, was never accepted by the city of Chicago. No objection is made, as we understand it, to the original plat of 1836. It is not contended that that plat was not made in strict accordance with the statutes upon the subject, as they then existed. It was a legal, statutory plat. If, therefore, the dedication of Michigan avenue, as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide, was accepted by the city of Chicago, the title to the street vested in the city in trust for the use of the public. The evidence in the record shows quite satisfactorily, that there was an acceptance of the offer of dedication by the city.

It will be impossible, and it is not necessary, to comment upon all the evidence relating to the subject of acceptance by the city. It is sufficient to set forth a few of the circumstances which indicate such acceptance. It is not altogether clear, that there had not been an acceptance of the dedication of this street by the town of Chicago before the incorporation of the city of Chicago. If there had been such acceptance by the town, then the fee of the street vested in the town by virtue.of the plat and of the acceptance; and, such being the fact, under the act incorporating the city of Chicago passed in 1837, the title to the street, as theretofore held in trust by the trustees of the town of Chicago, vested in the city of Chicago. (Illinois Central Railroad Co. v. Illinois, 146 U. S. 396).

Even, however, if there was no acceptance of the offer of dedication by the town of Chicago, the city of Chicago, after its incorporation, took such action in reference to the street, as clearly establishes an acceptance of the dedication thereof. On April 29,1844, the common council of the city of Chicago passed the following resolution:

“Resolved, That all that part of Michigan avenue which lies east of a line ninety feet east of the east line of a tier of lots on section 15, fronting said avenue on the east, shall be enclosed as a public park, and all that part of said avenue in Port Dearborn addition, which lies east of a line drawn due south from the south-west corner of the lot, belonging to the estate of John Wright and occupied by Mr. Lamb, shall be enclosed in a public park at the expense of the subscribers to such enclosure. ”

It is admitted that the lot, referred to as belonging to the estate of John Wright, was at the north-east corner of Randolph street and Michigan avenue. The strip in question lies east of a line ninety feet east of the east line of lots 9, 12 and 13 of block 21 in section 15, which front Michigan avenue on the east. Therefore, the strip here in controversy is. included within the language of the first clause of the resolution of April 29, 1844, and, by direction of the common council, was enclosed as a park. It was not necessary, that all of the street should be improved as a roadway. The common council had the right and power to set apart a portion of it as a park, or to be used for grass plots as a beautification of the highway. The ordinance of 1844 expressly recognizes the fact, that Michigan avenue is more than ninety feet wide by providing that the portion of it east of the ninety feet shall be enclosed for a special purpose. By that resolution the city assumed the authority to determine what portion of the street should be used for a roadway, and what portion thereof should be used for the purposes of a public park. The assumption of authority, thus exercised by the city through its common council, is affirmative evidence of an acceptance by the city of the dedication of the street as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide.

In addition to the resolution of April 29, 1844, the record shows other resolutions, passed by the city council in 1844 and in subsequent years, directing the street commissioner of the city to proceed in the work of protecting the lake shore of fractional section 15 from the action of the waters of Lake Michigan. Resolutions were passed, authorizing the borrowing of money to pay for such work of protecting the street. On July 5, 1845, a resolution was adopted by the common council, appointing five freeholders residing in the city to take action with reference to the protection of Michigan avenue from the encroachments of the lake. These resolutions show, that the city assumed control over the street and regarded itself as the owner thereof. We are of the opinion that there was an acceptance by the city of Chicago of the dedication of Michigan avenue as a street one hundred, and twenty feet wide, including the thirty-foot strip herein controversy, and that, therefore, the fee of the street one hundred and twenty feet wide between Park row and Twelfth street vested in the city of Chicago in trust for-the public.

It being established, then, that the city of Chicago was the owner of the fee of Michigan avenue, including the strip in question, no rights in the strip as a part of the street could accrue to the appellant, or any of his grantors, by reason of any possession of the strip, no matter how long continued.

In Lee v. Town of Mound Station, 118 Ill. 304, we said (p. 316): '“Assuming that there was a statutory dedication, and an acceptance by the public, the title to the property was vested in the corporation in trust for public use. The corporation held it in its governmental capacity only, and could therefore invest private parties with no rights in it inconsistent with the public use, and the Statute of Limitations would not, therefore, run in favor of a private party, to bar the rights of the public.” The title to Michigan avenue as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide, including the thirty-foot strip here in question, was vested in the city in its governmental capacity to hold for the use of the public, and, therefore, the Statute of Limitations could not run in favor of appellant, or any of his grantors, to bar the rights of the public.

It has always been the doctrine of this court, that the Statute of Limitations does not run against a municipal corporation in respect to property held for public use. (County of Piatt v. Goodell, 97 Ill. 84; Lee v. Town of Mound Station, supra; Greenwood v. Town of LaSalle, 137 Ill. 225; City of Joliet v. Werner, 166 id. 34; Jordan v. City of Chenoa, id. 530; City of Sullivan v. Tichenor, 179 id. 97; Village of Itasca v. Schroeder, 182 id. 192).

In Jordan v. City of Chenoa, supra, we said (p. 536): “Where streets and alleys have been dedicated and accepted they are held by the municipality in its public capacity. They are held in trust for the benefit of the general public, and, when so held, the Statute of Limitations will not run in favor of a private individual to bar the rights of the public.” In City of Sullivan v. Tichenor, supra, we said (p. 101): “Municipal authorities cannot grant a street for any purpose inconsistent with the public use, and as prescription presupposes a grant, it can not exist in such a case, and an individual cannot acquire a prescriptive right for any private use. * * * If complainant could gain no right by prescription or under the Statute of Limitations, to say that mere possession for any length of time could invest her with right or title to the premises would be to give her the benefit of the Statute of Limitations under some other name.” In the recent case of City of DeKalb v. Luney, 193 Ill. 185, the same doctrine has been again announced in the following words (p. 189): “Adverse possession of a portion of the street by the appellee and those in the line of his title or possession, no matter how long continued, had no effect, by reason of the provisions of the Statute of Limitations, to bar the right of the city to be restored to possession of the street to the full width thereof. The title to the street is vested in the city in its governmental capacity, to hold for the use of the public, and the Statute of Limitations does not run in favor of appellee to bar the right of the public.” So far, then, as the claimed title of the appellant is based upon long continued possession in himself and his grantors, it cannot avail as against the rights of the city.

While substantially conceding, that possession alone is not sufficient to give title to the strip, appellant contends that, in addition to the possession referred to, the city is barred by acts of estoppel and abandonment from insisting upon any interest in the strip, even if such interest was originally vested in it. So far as the matter of abandonment is concerned, it is well settled in such cases that there must not only be an apparent abandonment by the public, but an intention to abandon must be established by the evidence; and such intention must be clearly and satisfactorily proved. (Towqn of Lewiston v. Proctor, 27 Ill. 414; Elliott on Roads and Bridges, sec. 972; Horey v. Village of Haverstraw, 124 N. Y. 275.) There is no evidence in this record, tending to show an intention on the part of the public to abandon the strip in question. As was said by this court in the recent case of City of DeKalb v. Luney, supra: “Nor could any act or acts of abandonment of the street by those in authority in the governing body of the city, no matter though expressly made and declared, operate to create the estoppel, for it is not within the lawful exercise of the power of such authorities to abandon the streets which they hold for the use of the public, so that by the mere act of abandonment rights of the public therein may be lost.”

It is true, that the doctrine of estoppel has been held by this court to be applicable, under certain circumstances, to a municipal corporation, but “only as a means of preventing injustice or fraudulent results, where the acts of the municipality have induced a change of conduct in the complaining party.” (City of Chicago v. Sawyer, 166 Ill. 290; Lee v.Town of Mound Station, 118 id. 304). The holding of the court upon this subject is well stated in the case of Lee v. Toiun of Mound Station, supra, where it is said (p. 317): “It is true, that we have held that where the public have long withheld the assertion of control over streets, and private parties have been, by the acts of those representing the public, induced to believe the streets abandoned by the public, and on the faith of that belief, and with the acquiescence of those representing the public, they have placed themselves, by making ■ structures or improvements in the street, in a situation where they must suffer great pecuniary loss, if those representing the public be allowed afterwards to allege that the street was not abandoned, the doctrine of equitable estoppel may be applied.” In order to create an equitable estoppel against the city or the public in cases like the case at bar, something more than mere possession of a street on the part of private parties must be shown. In addition to possession, it must appear that such private party has erected structures or improvements on the street of such character, that it would entail pecuniary loss upon the private property owner, in case the public should assert its right to re-possess itself of the premises. An examination of most of the cases, referred to by counsel for appellant, will show that, in addition to possession, there was this fact of improvement by the erection of permanent structures. (City of Joliet v. Werner, 166 Ill. 34; Jordanv v. City of Chenoa, id. 530; Village of Itasca v. Schroeder, 182 id. 192; City of DeKalb v. Luney, supra).

In City of Chicago v. Sawyer, 166 Ill. 290, we said (p. 297): “As between individuals, if one by words or conduct willfully causes another to believe the existence of a certain state of things, and induces him to act upon it so as to change his previous condition, such person will be estopped to deny the truth of his representation. While this doctrine of equitable estoppel will be applied in proper cases to a municipal corporation where it represents public rights and interests, the municipality will be es-topped or not, in respect to such public right or interest, as justice and right may require. Such an estoppel can only be set up as a means of preventing injustice, where there has been a change of conduct induced by the act of the municipal corporation, and as a means of preventing a fraudulent result."

In City of Sullivan v.Tichenor, 179 Ill. 97, we said (p. 101): “In all the cases to which we have been referred, as sustaining the right of one who has trespassed upon a public street to retain the premises so taken, there has been some other element than the mere fact of possession, and the conditions have been such that it was necessary to estop the municipality to prevent injustice and wrong. The doctrine of equitable estoppel may be applied to municipal corporations where justice and right may require it. * * * A municipal corporation can no more profit by fraud upon property owners than an individual, and may be estopped by conduct. * '* * There are other cases to the same effect where parties had changed their position relying upon some act or conduct of the municipality.”

Applying the doctrine of these cases to the facts, shown by the record in the case at bar, we are unable to see that any estoppel properly arises against the city of Chicago in reference to the strip in question. The testimony shows, that the possession of the strip by private parties through enclosures by fences was by the permission and with the consent of the city for a temporary purpose. As has already been stated, Joseph Johnston built a house on lot 12 in 1852. Charles J. Wicker built a house on lot 10 in 1859, and Mrs. Temple, the daughter of Joseph Johnston, built a house on lot 11 in 1869. Inasmuch as all these parties had a mere permissive possession of the strip in question, and, while holding such possession, recognized the city as the owner of the strip, it cannot be said that they were induced by any conduct on the part of the city to build out the eaves or porches or steps of their houses into the strip. If any conduct of the city had induced them to believe that the strip had been abandoned, a different question might arise. But, here, thejr took possession of the strip under an arrangement or agreement with the city, by the terms of which they were to surrender possession at any time when the interests of the public demanded such surrender. This being so, it cannot be said that they made any improvements, or erected any structures upon any part of the strip, in the belief that the strip had been abandoned by the public. It cannot be said, therefore, that any change of conduct on their part has been induced by any act of the municipality, so that an assertion of right on the part of the municipality would work any injustice or fraudulent results to them. Whatever they did in the way of improvements was done with the knowledge, that the city claimed title to the strip, and would assert that title whenever it should deem it necessary to do so.

Mrs. Temple was twenty-three years old when her father, Joseph Johnston, built his house on lot 12. She lived there with him in that house. She became the owner of lots 11 and 12 in 1869, and, in that year, bnilt a house upon lot 11. She says that she had knowledge of the thirty-foot strip from the time that her father built his house in 1852; that he had no title to the strip; that she knew when the house was built that Michigan avenue, as platted, was one hundred and twenty feet wide; that there was an arrangement between the city authorities and the owners of the property, “by which the thirty-foot strip was to be enclosed by permission of the city until such time, if ever, that the public wanted to use it;” that she heard her father speak of such arrangement; that the arrangement was, “that he should have the use of the strip, and his object was simply to keep the place in decent order—to keep it nice and clean, instead of having it a waste of sand—a thoroughfare.” Fernando Jones testifies, that about 1859 he was a member of the common council, and that he and a Mr. Cleveland, who was then commissioner of the board of public works, went to see Mr. Wicker and Mr. Johnston with reference to the strip in question and had a talk with them about it; that thejr were acting in the interest of the city, and that he and Mr. Cleveland made an arrangement with Mr. Wicker and Mr. Johnston, and some others, that they would be allowed to fill up the strip with black soil, and sow seed and lay sod on it, so as to make a grass plot of it; that it was understood between Jones and Cleveland, acting for the city, and Wicker and Johnston and other property owners acting for themselves, that the fence should be taken away from the strip at any time when the city should require it to be done. Mr. C. C. P. Holden also testifies, that in 1865 or 1866 he was a member of the common council at the same time when Wicker was a member of the council, and that Wicker said at that time, “that he was ready at any time to yield up anything that the city might ask in the way of abandoning it;” that Wicker then stated, that he simply desired to fence it in and make a grass plot of it, or a playground for the children, and would surrender the possession whenever the interests of the public required. The testimony of Mrs. Temple, and of Jones, and of Holden upon this subject is not contradicted by any testimony in the record produced by the appellant. The fact, that the original possession of these parties was merely permissive, and not adverse, is immaterial for the purpose of showing that the possession was not adverse, because, as against the city, it made no difference whether the possession was adverse or not, but the permissive character of the original possession is important upon the question of estoppel, as showing that the city was guilty of no conduct, which induced these parties to believe, that it intended to release or surrender or abandon its right to the strip in question.

The testimony of the witnesses is confirmed by the conduct of the original owners of the property in question. For some years prior to 1852 Joseph Johnston owned the whole of block 23, and lived on the block, and had a soap factory upon the same, which was erected in the middle of the block. Jones says, that Joseph Johnston lived upon these premises seven or eight years before the house was built by him in 1852. The original patent, issued by the State to William H. Brown, was issued to Brown as assignee of Joseph Johnston, which would go to show that the six lots in block 23 had been bought by Johnston at the canal sale some years before 1848. Johnston knew, that Michigan avenue was one hundred and twenty feet wide, as laid out upon the original plat made by the canal commissioners, and also knew of the ordinance of the city passed in 1844, providing that all of Michigan avenue east of the west ninety feet thereof should be laid out as a public park, and not as a roadway. No conveyance of the thirty-foot strip, lying west of lots 11 and 12, was made by any of the parties holding title from 1848 down to 1892.

In 1853 Joseph Johnston conveyed what was after-wards lots 9 and 10 of Johnston & Laflin’s subdivision to Mathew Laflin, describing the property by metes and bounds, so that the western side thereof was the eastern line of Michigan avenue as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide. In other words, the conveyance by Johnston to Laflin did not include any part of the thirty-foot strip, lying just west of the premises conveyed. If Johnston had been induced to believe that the city had abandoned the thirty-foot strip, it is singular that he did not embrace the strip in the deed to Laflin. That deed was made a year after he had erected his-house, and projected the porch and the steps into the strip in question. Those projections could not have been made by him under the belief that the city had abandoned the strip, or he would have embraced a part of the strip in the conveyance to Laflin. In 1854, two years after Joseph Johnston’s house was built, he and Laflin made a subdivision of a part of block 23, in which they made the western lines of lots 10,11 and 12 front upon Michigan avenue as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide; that is to say, no part of the thirty-foot strip was embraced in the subdivision made by them, but that subdivision recognized Michigan avenue as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide. This would indicate that they did not regard the thirty-foot strip as having been abandoned by the city, but regarded it as still a part of the street. Again, in 1859 Johnston deeded lots 11 and 12 to Sylvester Lind, but deeded them as lots abutting upon a street one hundred and twenty feet wide, conveying no part of the thirty-foot strip in question. Mrs. Temple owned lots 11 and 12 from 1869 to 1886, a period of seventeen years, and, according to her testimony, she recognized the city as the owner of the strip during all this period, and regarded her possession of the lots and the improvements upon them as subordinate to the rights of the city in the strip.

When Mathew Laflin deeded what was afterwards lots 9 and 10 to Charles G-. Wicker in 1857, he described the property by metes and bounds as fronting on Michigan avenue as a street one hundred and twenty feet wide, and included in his deed no part of the strip, showing that Mathew Laflin did not regard the strip at that time as having been abandoned by the city, or as belonging to the adjoining lot owners. Wicker owned lots 9 and 10 from 1857 to 1875, a period of eighteen years, and the testimony tends to show that, during all this time he regarded his rights in said strip as subordinate to the rights of the city. It is true that, from 1875 to 1892, he and some of his grantees executed quit-claim deeds of all their interest in that portion of the strip which was enclosed by a fence, but this conveyance transferred nothing more than the mere permissive possession, which Wicker held originally. When appellant became the owner of lots 10, 11 and 12, he asserted ownership in the strip by conveying all three lots to Holmes and Higdon, including the strip in question. As soon as this assertion of title adverse to the city was made by appellant, the city took possession of the strip. Wicker’s house was on the line of the east edge of the strip in question, and was not built upon any portion of the strip. If he built the eaves of his house, and the bay window in the second story thereof, in such a way as to project a short distance over the strip, he was not induced to do so by any conduct of the city, because he well understood that his possession of the strip was merely permissive. It is difficult to understand, however, how any pecuniary loss or sacrifice can accrue to his grantees by reason of the projections in question, as it is perfectly feasible for the city to use the strip without compelling him to remove the projections of the eaves and the bay window.

The record is full of evidence that, for more than ten years after 1844, the city co-operated with the property owners themselves in the improvement of Michigan avenue, but which improvement, so far as made by the property owners, was in entire subordination to the rights of the city. Contributions were made by the property owners living on Michigan avenue, as well as by the city, during these years, for the protection of the land against the encroachments of the lake. On June 7, 1858, the common council of the city passed an ordinance, granting permission to the residents on the west side of Michigan avenue to lay out courts or parks extending into the avenue twenty-six feet, including the sidewalk. On August 2, 1858, upon the petition of C. O. Wicker and others, the common council passed an order, directing" the superintendent to enter into an agreement with the property owners fronting the south end of Lake Park, granting them the privilege of improving the street in accordance with their request, provided that no right the city then possessed over the street should be forfeited. Jones says in his testimony, that the arrangement, which he and Cleveland made with Wicker, was made because the common council had made no provision by ordinance allowing lot owners on the east side of Michigan avenue to occupy the area, as had been the case on the west side of the avenue and north of Park row. In other words, it having been the policy of the city at that time to ask the aid of the property owners in improving the street, the fact, that the same was improved by the property owners, was no indication of any abandonment on the part of the city.

It is claimed by counsel for appellant, that the arrangement with the property owners herein referred to was illegal, and beyond the power of any city official to make the same. We are inclined to agree with counsel in the g'eneral doctrine, that neither the city, nor any of its officials, has the power to turn over a public street to private parties to be used for private purposes. But the validity of the arrangement in question is not here involved, nor is it necessary to discuss or pass upon the same. Nothing herein said is to be understood as endorsing the validity of such an arrangement; but whether the arrangement was legal or illegal, the fact, that the property owners entered into it, was a recognition of the ownership of the city in the street, and showed that the property owners were willing to submit to the rights of the city therein, and that-they were not induced by any acts or conduct on the part of the city, or its officials, to make any expenditures, or improvements, the removal of which would result in injury to them, or in pecuniary loss by them.

The rights of the city were in no way prejudiced by the decree entered by the superior court in November, 1893, in the proceeding brought by the appellant to foreclose the trust deed, executed to Ullmann by Holmes and Rigdon, because that decree expressly provided, that no interests of the city were to be affected, except so far as the quit-claim deed, executed by Holmes and Rigdon, conveying the strip to the city, was concerned. In other words, the decree left the rights of the city in the strip as fixed by the original dedication, and the acceptance thereof, undisturbed. Holmes and Rigdon, when they obtained a quit-claim of the strip from the appellant, at once deeded the strip to the city, and Rigdon, in the subsequent proceeding brought by Hopson, disclaimed any interest whatever in the strip.

No ordinances were passed by the city prior to the erection of the house on lot 12 by Joseph Johnston and of the house on lot 10 by Wicker, which could have induced the erection of the projections, connected with those houses and extending over the strip. An ordinance was passed by the city in March, 1859, providing for the improvement of Michigan avenue between Park row and Twelfth street to a width of ninety feet. Great reliance is placed by counsel for appellant upon this ordinance, as showing an intention of the city to abandon the thirty-foot strip, and make Michigan avenue a street only ninety feet wide. The ordinance was merely evidence of the intention of the city to make the roadway and sidewalks a certain width, but did not necessarily indicate any intention to abandon the thirty-foot strip, inasmuch as, by a previous ordinance, that was set apart for purposes of a park, or a series of grass plots. Moreover, the ordinance of March, 1859, was passed after the houses of Johnston and Wicker were built, and, therefore, could not have operated in any way as an estoppel against the city, inasmuch as no reliance could have been placed upon that ordinance as justifying the building of the projections over into the strip.

We see no force in the fact, that the South Park commissioners have taken no steps to improve the strip in question. The ordinance passed by the city was broad enough to turn over the control of Michigan avenue, as .a street one hundred and twenty feet wide between Park row and Twelfth street, to the park commissioners. The •question here involved is not affected by the fact, that .the park commissioners have taken no action in reference to the improvement of the strip.

A proceeding was brought in the circuit court of Cook •county in 1892 or 1893 by Joseph Hopson and his wife against the city of Chicago and others, in which a decree was rendered finding the title to the thirty-foot strip here in controversy to be in the city of Chicago, and enjoining the city from attempting to give to any persons .any rights in said strip contrary to its duties as a trustee, holding the title in trust for the uses of the public for the purposes of a public street. Counsel for appellant claims, that the court erred in admitting the record ■of the proceeding's in this Hopson suit in evidence. It makes no difference whether there was any error in this :respect or not, as the present proceeding is a chancery proceeding, and there is evidence in the record properly admissible, and properly admitted, which is sufficient to sustain the decree of the court below.

The decree of the superior court of Cook county, dismissing the bill for want of equity at the cost of the appellant, is affirmed.

Decree aSrmerL

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